Onload Recovers Meltdown Lost Performance

The recently announced microprocessor architecture vulnerability known as Meltdown is focused on accessing memory that shouldn’t be available to the currently running program. Meltdown exploits a condition where the processor allows an unprivileged application the capability to continually harvest data unrestricted from anywhere in system memory. The flaw that enables Meltdown is based on microprocessor performance enhancements more than a decade old and are now common in Intel and some ARM processors. The solution to Meltdown is Kernel page-table isolation (KPTI), but it doesn’t come without a performance impact which ranges from 5-30%, every application behaves differently. Since Onload places the communications stack into that application’s userspace this dramatically reduces the number of kernel calls for network operations and as such avoids most of the performance impact brought on by KPTI. Redhat confirm this in a recent article on this topic. This means that applications leveraging Onload on KPTI patched kernels will see an even greater performance advantage.

By contrast Spectre tears down the isolation that exists between running applications. It allows a malicious application to trick error-free programs into leaking their secrets. It does this by scanning the process address space of those programs, and the kernel libraries on which they depend, looking for exploitable code. When this vulnerable code is executed it acts as a covert channel transmitting its secrets to the malicious application. This vulnerability affects a wider range of processors and requires both kernel and CPU microcode patches, and even then, the vulnerability hasn’t been 100% eliminated. More work remains to be done to shut down Spectre.